Saturday, July 20, 2024

Stop Trying to Understand Kafka

Solzhenitsyn's warning. After the gulag, he smelled intellectual rot wherever he went. Naive killjoy or vindicated prophet?... more »


Confessions of a Hitman (FrenchConfessions) is a Canadian crime drama film, directed by Luc Picard and released in 2021. Based on Gallant: confessions d’un tueur à gages, a 2015 non-fiction book written by Éric Thibault and Félix Séguin about Canadian contract killer Gerald Gallant, the film stars Picard as Gallant.
Confessions of a Hitman tells the story of one of the most prolific hitmen of our time. With twenty-eight murders and fifteen attacks on his hunting trophy, Gérald Gallant surprises and confuses. How did this little man stammers with fragile health and a modest IQ, living with his pious and generous wife in a tidy house in the heart of a quiet neighborhood in the Province of Quebec, manage to outwit both the most hardened criminals and the smartest policemen? It is here the hitman himself who explains himself and lifts the veil on his own life... even if it means manipulating those to whom he speaks along the way.


How To Write Funny

Author Sally Franson says that if you want belly laughs, you might have to go through some painful experiences first. “The harder I laughed or the harder I cried, the more people laughed. And it wasn’t malicious, you know, it was like, I see you. That is so human.” - Slate


       Bestselling in ... the UK

       At The Bookseller Tom Tivnan reports on the bestselling books and authors in the UK for the first half of the year, according to Nielsen BookScan; see also the top 20 -- both by units sold and value. 
       Julia Donaldson tops the list, with 1,253,890 units sold; J.K.Rowling is third, with 383,261; Stephen King slips in at number 19, with 159,186.


High-End Print Magazines Are Making A Comeback (In A Different Way)

High-end niche periodicals are popping up, but the trend might be most evident in a burst of small-batch, independent outdoors magazines like Adventure Journal, Mountain Gazette, Summit Journal and Ori. They are crowding into quiet spaces of narrow lanes — climbing, surfing, skiing, running and the like.



His parables aren’t supposed to make sense. 

the rabbis of the talmuD taught in parables, fanciful tales meant to illustrate moral principles. To what may a parable be compared? one of them once asked, that being the form of most rabbinical questions. To a cheap candle used by a king to find a gold coin. With just one modest anecdote, you may fathom the Torah!



And into the light

Design and culture things. An Ancient Mappe of Fairyland, Newly Discovered and Set ForthBernard Sleigh’s magnum opus was one of the origins of our ideals of the fantasy world / Logos of the Early Ufology Scene / see also UFO Sightings Around the World, from 1613 experiments with Google, archived now that the company has pivoted to AI / a famous literary hoax: Naked Came the Stranger / industrial hoaxer John Ernst Worrell Keely and his discovery of ‘etheric vapor’ / a collection of ‘Out-of-place artifacts‘ / Signs and Wonders: Celestial Phenomena in 16th-Century Germany (via MeFi) / Wynford Vaughan-Thomas reports from a bombing raid over Berlin, 1943 / the Secret Netflix Codes Cheat Sheet / The Past and Future of Galactic Suburbia / the life and work of Crockett Johnson (Harold and the Purple Crayon, etc) / Lego cars by Peter Blackert / Powell and Pressburger’s A Canterbury Tale, 1944 / Ethnologue, a site about the languages of the world / On This Spot, ‘hundreds of recreatable then and now photos’ / great cars at Curbside Classic / the Chevrolet Sky Lounge Camper / printing and binding 8000 unique covers for Eye Magazine / the collapse of Fisker Automotive / more AI mush confusion, courtesy of the estate of Ansel Adams / Instagram and AIHow to opt out of Meta’s AI training / see also ‘ChatGPT on your iPhone? The four reasons why this is happening far too early‘ / AI Is a False God / I Will Fucking Piledrive You If You Mention AI Again.

John Margolies’ Photographs of Roadside America / File Photo Digital Archive / ‘walking journals‘ from Japan / Rose Couch paints with thread / zines and more at Unitom / old vs new, an exercise in automotive scale / Neo-Selectric, a typeface by Ben Fehrman-Lee / The Exotica Project, ‘one hundred dreamland 45s’ / books about juvenile delinquency / see also Pulp Crush / which reminded us to check on a couple of favourite old school sites. Happily they’re both in rude health: Diamond Geezer and Everlasting Blort / design by Melissa Price / some great online second hand books / The Yellow Wallpaper, 1892, by Charlotte Perkins Gilman, who was once ordered to ‘never touch pen, brush or pencil as long as you live’ by a contemporary neurologist / ‘Horror stories of cryonics: The gruesome fates of futurists hoping for immortality,’ e.g. papers like Suspension Failures: Lessons from the Early Years. Related, our visit to Alcor / The Wind Map, ‘a living portrait of the wind currents over the U.S’ / from 2000, ‘A high-tech hunt for the Loch Ness Monster‘ / Tiny Awards honours modest websites / sort of related, post germination at MeFi’s LinkMe

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Music things. Prince could be tricky to work for / cigarettes, cigarettes, cigarettes vs cigarettes, cigarettes, cigarettes, cigarettes / The Loft’s Gideon Coe session / She’s All About That Bass, ‘It’s not your imagination: a disproportionate number of women really do play bass guitar in rock bands’ / Ferrous is an eBow for the modern age / quirky, unique sonic instruments from Archil Lab / PlayPhrase, search films for dialogue / Disquiet, a site about music / All the Techno Subgenres (with examples) / contemporary classical by Darcy Copeland / a guide to Hawkwind’s best albums / related, It’s Nice That on how AI-generated album covers prioritise virality over creativity. Hawkwind-type album art is ripe for ripping off, although space-art-doyenne Chris Foss recently spoke out in favour of AI’s positive use as a tool / Wax Heads, a game about running a record shop (via the Guardian) / BBC Sound Effects collection / The Vinyl Factory — Reverb, a sound and media installation currently on show at London’s 180 Studios / music by Tony Njoku.

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Architecture things. Beautiful prints by t_zuan0321 / Texas Gothic Revival, the style you didn’t know you needed at McMansion Hell. Sort of describes modern America in a nutshell, really / a short guide to Frank Lloyd Wright / the sad End of the Wayfarers Chapel / highlights from the 2024 London Festival of Architecture / Dystopikais a tool for making dystopian cyberpunk cities / see also ICity, ‘a Geometry Nodes-powered procedural city generator for Blender’ / Josep Lluís Sert’s abandoned hotel complex at Cala D’en Serra, Ibiza / Doughnut Economics and urbanism, a new humanist economic model / an obituary for architect Julyan Wickham / retro futurism always sucked. How about a Return to Ladybird Modernism. Let’s go ‘Back to an optimistic vision of the future from the past’, at Grindrod, via Meanwhile / who could the pulverizer of Art Deco friezes possibly be? / Non-Structures by Francisco Ibanez Hantke at The Velvet Cell / suggested alternatives to flattening M&S Oxford Street / the Twentieth Century Society is seeking to save the KX100 phone kiosk / related, Kiosk, the last Modernist Booths, a new book from Zupagrafika / The Fence fields a strong line-up for the 2024 Carbuncle Cup (not to be confused with Building Design’s award of the same name). Winners, all / the backrooms photo and our fascination with liminal, queasy spaces / see also The Backrooms of the Internet Archive

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Art things. Who’s got a problem with Damien Hirst? / art by Emily C Thomas / contemporary craft recommendations / paintings by John Clark / reliefs and artworks by Elias Sime / beautiful art books by Patrick Fry Studio / ‘Looking at people looking at art: inside the mind of a gallery attendant‘ / art by Philippa Tunstill / art by Jess Blandford / art by Dan Preece / beautiful drawings by Leggy Gordon / the work of Michael Perton and Elke Grabbert / Michael Mandiberg’s ‘Zoom Paintings’ / Loft LawJoshua Charow’s photographs of New York’s last surviving artist’s lofts / ‘That yearning feeling: why we need nostalgia’.